Title: Prehistory, the Neolithic Revolution, and River Civilizations
1Prehistory, the Neolithic Revolution, and River
Civilizations
2- BIG PICTURE Development of agriculture a MAJOR
CHANGE in human history. Most societies were
agricultural. Still a clash between
industrialized world and agricultural patterns.
3I. Human Evolution
- Emergence of humans 2.5 million BCE 9,000 BCE
Hunter - Gatherers - Earliest versions of humans from East Africa
(Olduvai Gorge) - Use of tools and domestication of animals
- Homo sapiens sapiens (H.s.s.) 120,000 years ago
- Migration around the world resources
- 25,000 BCE H.s.s. spread around the world (few
exceptions)
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5Early Human Sites
6II. Neolithic (Agricultural) Revolution
- People spread out and formed distinct cultures
based on their environment - 10,000 9,000 BCE 5 10 million people
- H.s.s. coexisted with other species
(Neanderthals) but eventually triumphed over them - Development of Agriculture and Industrial
Revolution two MAJOR changes
7Agricultural Roots
Middle East/Black Sea -9000 8000 BCE Wheat and barley
South China/Continental Southeast Asia 7000 BCE Rice
Central America 5000 BCE Maize (corn)
POSSIBLY Sub Saharan Africa and Northern China
8 III. Changes from Neolithic Revolution
- 5000 BCE agriculture common but slow
disadvantages - Few contacts among far flung population
- Environment not suitable (desert, heavy forest)
- Success of nomadic herding in some regions
- Staying in one placewaiting
- GREATER WORK LOAD
9- Gender relations changed patriarchal societies
- Higher birthrate necessary
- Men primary cultivators
- Inequalities between men/women
- Settled, clustered groups at higher risk of
disease - Altered local environments (slash and burn)
- INCREASE IN FOOD SUPPLY RESULTED IN INCREASED
POPULATION - Agricultural societies 80/20
- Spring and divine creation
- Surpluses - pottery
10WHY?
- Why would perfectly happy and healthy
hunter-gatherers have settled down to be farmers?
What processes encouraged this transition? - How do periods of cold and warm weather affect
human development?
11 IV. Early Civilizations
- Why Rivers?
- Agriculture- dependable water supply
- AND stuff already grows there
- Domesticated animals
- Ability to settle
- More temperate climate
- Irrigation possible- plays a big role in
emergence of civilizations
12A. Mesopotamia
- First civilization Sumeria, 5,000 BCE
- Tigris Euphrates large agricultural surplus
- Later, Akkad (empire 2340 BCE), Babylon (early
2nd millenium BCE) - Used bronze improved military, required long
distance trade - Wheel (Central Asian nomads)
13Mesopotamian firsts
- First because
- Writing - cuneiform (long distance comm., trade,
knowledge passed on) - City-states, formal/structured government
- Monumental architecture (ziggurat)
- Military strategies and armor
- Irrigation (need rules to regulate)
- Not first, but remembered for
- Law code of Hammurabi (c. 1750 BCE)
14Mesopotamia
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16B. EGYPT- Gift of the Nile
- MIGRATION 5000 BCE to Nile- ran out of water in
Sahara - Civilization emerged 3000 BCE
- Nile very regular, viewed as a benevolent god
- Made Egypt hugely productive
- Creation myths flood cycle
- 5X the area of France, 6M years old
17- Increasing population needs greater political
organization - Larger of pop. lived in farming villages than
cities - Ethnically diverse
- Less stark social divisions than Mesopotamia
- Women had more mobility (esp. upper class)
18Social Pyramid
PHAROAH
PRIESTS
NOBLES
MERCHANTS/ARTISANS
PEASANTS
SLAVES
19Politics
- Three major periods
- OLD KINGDOM 2700 B.C. to 2200 B.C.
- MIDDLE KINGDOM 2050 B.C. to 1652 B.C.
- NEW KINGDOM 1532 B.C. to 1070 B.C. (height)
- Major rulers
- Old Kingdom Narmer (Menes), Khufu, Khafra,
Menkure - New Kingdom Ramses II, Hatshepsut, Akhenaten
20Religion
- Re (Sun god), Osiris, Isis - reincarnation
(Egyptian Book of the Dead) Papyrus - Pharoahs divine (Horus)
- Pyramids, mummies postmortem judgment
- Gods of conquered territories incorporated
21Hieroglyphs
- Hieroglyphic pictograms can be read in up to
three different ways - they can represent exactly what they look like
- they can represent an idea (i.e. son of), or
- they can represent a sound (sa)
Written script
Spoken language
Hieroglyphs (formal writing) Ancient Egyptian
Hieratic (cursive handwriting) Ancient Egyptian
Demotic (evolved from hieratic) Demotic
Coptic (evolved from Demotic, uses Greek characters) Coptic
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23C. INDUS VALLEY
- 2500 BCE Major cities Harappa and Mohenjo
Dara (now underwater) - Written language (still uncoded) lots of Qs
- Architecture indicates strong central authority
- Indus River was very unpredictable- flooded the
cities frequently, also frequent monsoons - Trade with north and west tools/stones of high
quality/value - Fell before the invasions of Indo Europeans
(natural disaster? systems failure?)
24Mohenjo-Daro Harappa
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